About Monarchs

I first met monarch butterflies in 1970 while working as a farm hand on my brother-in-law’s truck farm on Nantucket Island. I was trying to understand how milkweed flowers changed to produce milkweed pods and I brought home the caterpillars by mistake. Very soon all of my attention was focused on the yellow, black and white caterpillars munching on the milkweed. I was fascinated by their metamorphosis into a jade-green chrysalis and emergence as beautiful orange and black butterflies. They became my teachers, a metaphor for my life and eventually a central focus for much of my work.

We tend to think that a monarch goes through major metamorphosis when it becomes a chrysalis or when the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis, but in fact the parts that will transform the caterpillar into a butterfly are present from the time that the egg hatches. Inside the caterpillar are “imaginal disks.” As wonderfully fanciful as the word imaginal sounds, it is actually referring to the adult stage of the monarch which is called the imago. These disks are the cells that will become the butterfly’s wings, legs, proboscis and antennae, among other things. By the time the caterpillar is half an inch long its butterfly wings are already developing inside it. By the time it is a full grown caterpillar all of the imaginal disks have grown considerably.

Monarch caterpillars are the larval stage of monarch butterflies. The larval stage is the growing stage. A monarch caterpillar will increase in size 3000 times in the two weeks from the day it hatches until it is ready to pupate and become a chrysalis. Monarchs are insects and like all insects they have to shed their exoskeleton and grow a new larger one several times as they get bigger. A monarch caterpillar sheds its exoskeleton 5 times. It goes through five instars. An instar is a stage between molts. When the caterpillar emerges from it egg it is a first instar caterpillar. When it sheds its exoskeleton the first time, it becomes a second instar caterpillar.

When the caterpillar is a full grown fifth instar caterpillar it is ready to molt the fifth time to become a pupa, or chrysalis. The caterpillar will begin to wander until it finds an appropriate place to create its chrysalis. It will lay down a silk mat, like it has every time that it has molted before. But this time it will spend time creating a small wad of silk–a silk button—in the middle of its mat. When it is ready it will grasp the silk button with it last prolegs and hang upside down. This is called hanging in “j.”

As the monarch wriggles and pushes its exoskeleton toward the last prolegs where it is holding on to the silk button, it must execute a very tricky feat. With the wad of discarded exoskeleton and the last two prolegs that are holding the monarch up, only tenuously attached to the emerging chrysalis and lodged on a couple small protrusions on the chrysalis called holdfast tubercles, the monarch must pull a small stick like appendage, called a cremaster, out of that wad of old skin and drive it into the silk button. Its exoskeleton is very soft and pliable at this point. The monarch cannot afford to fall. Its exoskeleton is not sturdy enough to withstand an impact with a hard surface. The chrysalis with all the beautiful new butterfly parts it has been growing would splatter. Accidents like that have made some people believe that at this point the monarch is nothing but a loose soup contained inside the chrysalis exoskeleton, but in fact it has a beating heart, a respiratory system, emerging wings, antennae, legs and proboscis–all kinds of organization and function. It just needs a little down time to complete and switch over to the new system. Old, no longer needed caterpillar parts must be reabsorbed and the butterfly parts formed by the imaginal disks must be completed. It MUST attach itself directly to that silk button.

You can see the proboscis, antennae, wings and legs on the surface of the chrysalis, and locate the spiracles through which it can breathe. ( An excellent picture of a newly formed monarch chrysalis, which very clearly shows the antennae, legs, wings, proboscis and other body parts of the developing monarch, can be found on Edith Smith’s (of Shady Oak Farm) Wednesday, January 21, 2009, Blog page “What is Going On Inside a Monarch Chrysalis?” Please check out the link on the sidebar. ) If you examine the segment just below the six dots under the cremaster you can tell whether the monarch is a boy or a girl. Girls have a little crease or indentation in the segment.

The monarch will be a chrysalis for about 10 days (longer if it is cooler, shorter if it is hotter).

An excellent picture of a newly formed monarch chrysalis, which very clearly shows the antennae, legs, wings, proboscis and other body parts of the developing monarch, can be found on Edith Smith’s (of Shady Oak Farm) Wednesday, January 21, 2009, Blog page “What is Going On Inside a Monarch Chrysalis?” Please check out the link on the sidebar.

Monarch Eclosing

The triangular piece of chrysalis exoskeleton covering the antennae, legs and proboscis breaks open first. The monarch swings down and out of the chrysalis with a huge abdomen full on hemolymph ( the insect equivalent of blood), tiny wings and a proboscis in two pieces. As contractions move up and down the abdomen, forcing hemolymph into the veins of the wings and expanding them, the monarch knits together the two sides of its new mouth. Once assembled, the proboscis will be perfect for drinking nectar. When the wings are fully expanded the butterfly will excrete a few drops of reddish liquid. This is meconium, it is the waste produced by the monarch while it was a chrysalis. It probably held onto it until after the wings were inflated to give itself an extra little bit of pressure to help force the hemolymph into the wings…or maybe it was just too busy to deal with it until it was done with all that other work!

All summer long monarchs will eclose from their chrysalides, mate and lay eggs. A female may lay anywhere from 400 to 1200 eggs over her 4 week life time. But at the end of the summer, a generation of monarchs comes out of chrysalis ready to live 8 months and take on a great migration to the monarch reserves in Mexico or, if they live in California and in the west, to roosts along the coast. These butterflies will emerge in reproductive diapause (they will be sexually immature) and they will be ready to follow cues to a place where the temperatures and moisture are just right to allow them to wait out the winter months before they return to their summer breeding grounds in the spring.

(Most of the photos above were taken by my brother Mark Rea as we watched several monarchs going into “j,” become chrysalides and eclose as butterflies. I will be coming back to this page to add more…

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9 Responses to About Monarchs

Enjoyed the pictures! Freezing here in Ohio today; I haven’t seen a Monarch migrating down from Canada in weeks. Thanks again for the pleasurable reading. Kudos to the elderly lady. When I’m that age, I will still be enjoying Monarchs too. Robert in Fremont, Ohio

What a miraculous development. A friend of mine raises Monarchs, in fact raised over 700 last summer and has the pleasure of visiting Mexico. My knowledge has come from Judy and her keen interest – this truly is one of the worlds miracles!!!!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge and information – Bye – Mary

I am so fascinated. I just found my very own pupae yesterday and today after planting milkweed in the spring. All of this information has been so helpful and intriguing. One question remains: what makes the little gold bits on the skin of the chrysalis gold?

Sorry it took so long to reply. The gold spot are created by folds in the clear chrysalis cuticle (exoskeleton) refracting light…kind of like all the beautiful colors on a puddle with oil floating on it. There have been theories about their function in the past, but the experiments done to test those theories have not been replicable. Many chrysalides from this family of butterflies have beautiful metallic sp
ots and whole surfaces. It may just be they way they are like red or black hair or brown or blue eyes.

Amazing!! I’m an enrichment teacher at an elementary school in Virginia. We’re right on a migratory lane. This is a SUPER resource. Especially LOVE the large, detailed pics that can be supersized!!! Thank you for your attention to detail ;)

I am glad I found your site. The information is wonderful. I have 2 chrylisas to eclose yet. It is pretty chilly here, 60’s and colder at night. I brought the aquarium into the house from sunroom because of the low night temperatures. Two butterflies eclosed on 9/21 & 9/22. I am hoping the weather will get alittle warmer so I can let them go soon. I have tagged 30 Monarchs so far. I will be checking my e-mail for more from you.

Wonderful blog – from South Africa! Thanks so much for the detail – love the photos. I am taking part in a moth research in South Africa at the moment and have a chrylisas which is close to eclosing – I hope it will be a moth, but who knows? Can one tell, Ba Rea?